by Jeremy Bransten and Michael Lelyveld
23-11-04
Despite its geographic proximity, China for the past century played only a
marginal role in Central Asia. Economically, politically and culturally,
Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan were firmly in
Russia's orbit. Chinese pop music blares from loudspeakers, mixing with the cries of Chinese
traders at a busy local market. Welcome to China? No, in fact, we are in
Kazakhstan's commercial capital, Almaty, at the Ya-Lian bazaar. Since it opened
in 1997, the Ya-Lian has become one of the city's largest market places,
attracting thousands of shoppers to its stalls, which offer everything from
household appliances and clothes to consumer electronics. This street activity is just one sign of China's growing presence in the
region. But at higher levels, Chinese officials and business leaders have been
crisscrossing the region, signing cooperation agreements and contracts that aim
to expand Beijing's foothold. China's interest in countries such as Kazakhstan
and Turkmenistan is motivated to a large extent by its need for their energy
resources. China's economy is booming, but its domestic oil and mining
industries cannot keep pace with demand. Those efforts are beginning to bear fruit. In May, after seven years of
negotiations, China and Kazakhstan agreed to build a 1,000 km pipeline from
Kazakhstan's central Karaganda region to China's north-western Xinjiang region
by the end of 2005. The pipeline will be a key link in a 3,000 km project that
aims to join China to the Caspian Sea. China has also offered to help Uzbekistan
develop its small oil fields in the Ferghana Valley. Niklas Swanstrom is executive director of theprogram for contemporary Silk
Road studies at Sweden's Uppsala University. Speaking from Beijing, where he is
a guest lecturer at Renmin University, Swanstrom said the quest for natural
resources shapes China's policies in Central Asia, but the quest is not the
whole picture. This has led Beijing to set up trade missions in every Central Asian country,
invest in local enterprises, donate money to aid projects, and give a high
profile to new organizations, such as the Shanghai Cooperation Organization that
group the region's countries, plus China and Russia. On the security front, Beijing has found eager partners in Central Asia's
authoritarian leaders, who share its worries about Islamic militancy, as
international affairs expert John Garver, a professor at the Georgia Institute
of Technology in the United States, noted. Omurbek Tekebaev, leader of Kyrgyzstan's opposition Atameken (Motherland)
Socialist Party, told that it was the US that involuntarily helped China expand
its presence in Central Asia. He traced the rise to the September 11, 2001,
terrorist attacks against the US. Swanstrom of Uppsala University said Russia's sometimes tenuous grip over the
region has paved the way for outsiders, including the Americans, to come in. But
the Chinese -- because of their comprehensive regional economic and security
interests -- have been the most effective. Not everyone in Central Asia is happy about China's interest in the region.
There is a latent fear, especially in the countries bordering China, that
Beijing is hungry for land. And if that is the case, even a small immigration of
Chinese to the region would swamp the local populations. Although it is vast in
territory, for example, Kazakhstan's population of some 14 mm people represents
just over 1 % of China's 1.4 bn people. Swanstrom was more optimistic. For now, Russia continues to enjoy a decisive
cultural and economic advantage in Central Asia. But he argued that breaking
this monopoly could serve the Central Asians well. China is reaching out to Central Asia to feed its growing appetite for energy
resources. Although some projects have languished for years, a new pipeline
project from Kazakhstan may turn into China's first major Central Asian energy
route. China is making inroads into Central Asia as its need for energy imports
keeps climbing. Under the Chinese government's "go west" policy, state companies
have revived projects in Kazakhstan that have languished since 1997, when China
National Petroleum Corporation promised to invest $ 9.5 bn in pipelines and oil
fields thousands of kilometres from home. Ebel said that Central Asia offers China land routes that reduce the
vulnerability of depending solely on ocean transport. But so far, the returns
from Central Asia have been small.
Source: Asia Times OnlineThe dragon in Central Asia: The hunt for friends, and oil
But independence in 1991 brought changes, among them the opening of the
"Bamboo Curtain" to the East. Initially, it was shuttle traders
bringing consumer goods from China who began to fan out across Central Asia.
Then came big business and senior politicians. In just over a decade, China --
with its booming economy and growing political clout -- has become a major
player in the region.
It is a scene repeated at hundreds of Chinese markets across Central Asia.
Initially, the traders were locals bringing in scarce goods from just across the
border to sell. But in recent years, they have been replaced by an influx of
Chinese tradesmen who have set up more permanent shops and become a fixture of
Central Asian urban life.
Chinese officials, as a result, have fanned out across the globe,including into
Central Asia, in search of suppliers, as Xu Yihe, senior reporter with the Dow
Jones News wires in Singapore, told.
"Chinese oil companies are almost everywhere in the world," Xu said.
"They're dispatching teams of oil experts to negotiate oil projects,
especially upstream projects in Asia, the Middle East, Africa and North
America."
Chinese investment is also going into other energy resources, such as
hydroelectric projects in Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan, with scores of additional
plans up for discussion.
China is rapidly emerging as a world power. In a decade or two, it might
directly challenge the supremacy of the United States, Japan, and Europe. But
before this happens, Beijing's leaders are trying to create a zone of friendly
and stable countries around China's borders that will give them political
support, as well as economic leverage in the future.
"The Chinese do want natural resources," Swanstrom said. "They do
want oil and gas because China is in desperate need of these as its economy
grows. But it goes deeper than that. They want to secure the borders. They want
to make sure that Central Asia is a stable region. Because if Central Asia runs
into military conflicts, it is likely to spread over to Xinjiang, China's
westernmost province. And that would be a problem for the Chinese government. So
part of this is to create stability in the Central Asia region because stability
in Central Asia means stability for China. And also, it's in the Chinese
interest to develop these markets, to create the infrastructure in Central
Asia."
"I think there is a meeting of the minds between China's leaders on the one
hand and the leaders of the post-Soviet Central Asian states on the other. And
cooperation in this area takes the form of intelligence exchanges, police
cooperation, training of police, training of military forces, and the design of
military operations targeting terrorist activities," Garver said.
"After 9/11, the United States broke the old stereotype, sending its troops
to Central Asia and the Transcaucasus," Tekebaev said. "When the US
strengthened its position, China began to also show that it was interested in
Central Asia. So, recently, the Chinese leadership told a meeting [of regional
leaders] in Tashkent that it will invest about $ 4 bn in the Central Asian
countries. For example, Chinese leaders spoke openly about their intention to
pay the full cost of about $ 1.5 bn for the construction of a highway from China
to Central Asia, via Kyrgyzstan."
"It has to do with the Russian domestic weakness to a certain extent, and
that gives the Chinese and many other actors -- among them, of course, the
United States and Europe -- an opportunity to move in," Swanstrom said.
"But the Americans and Europeans have not taken that opportunity to the
same extent that the Chinese have."
The charge is dismissed out of hand by Beijing officials. But Murat Auezov, a
former Kazakh ambassador to China, was less than diplomatic when expressing his
concerns.
"I know Chinese culture. We should not believe anything the Chinese
politicians say," Auezov said. "As a historian, I'm telling you that
19th-century China, 20th-century China and 21st-century China are three
different Chinas. But what unites them is a desire to expand their
territories."
"It doesn't necessarily have to be a zero-sum game, but from the Central
Asian states, there's also interest in decreasing the Russian influence and to
have Chinese influence -- maybe even Indian influence and American influence and
European influence," Swanstromsaid. "They have realized over the years
that it's not good to have one dominant power in the region. They don't want it
to be the Chinese or the Russians. They're trying to diversify the influence
over the region, and they are very conscious about the fact that neither the
Russians nor the Chinese would be the perfect actor to dominate the
region."
Spurred by an economy that grew by nearly 10 % in the first half of the year,
China has been seeking new oil sources in the region and around the world.
China's oil imports have already soared by 34 % this year. China has been an oil
importer since 1996, but its recent economic boom has pushed it past Japan to
make it the world's second-biggest oil consumer, behind the US. High demand has
driven the country's state-owned oil companies into foreign markets that seemed
too distant only a few years ago.
Robert Ebel, who directs the energy and national security program at the Centre
for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, said the reason for
China's involvement in Central Asia is prompted both by its higher domestic
demand and its need to reduce the risk of relying on the Middle East.
"I think [China] sees that its requirements are going to be met in the
future only through imports, and so they're just reaching out to wherever they
can -- whether it's Azerbaijan, or Syria or Russia or Central Asia, or Venezuela
-- to diversify these sources of imports, not only to diversify their sources of
supply but how the oil gets to China," Ebel said.
For now, Kazakhstan is the only Central Asian country that exports oil to China.
Kazakh oil shipments to China, which are sent by rail, account for less than 1 %
of China's imports. But that could soon change thanks to an agreement in May to
build a 1,000 km oil pipeline from Kazakhstan's central Karaganda region to
western China.